Bloomington Telephone, Volume 14, Number 3, Bloomington, Monroe County, 4 June 1889 — Page 3
LIFE IN THE SETERED HEAD.
The- SwrrtreA of Consciousness Alter Decapitation Proven. A volume has just been published at Paris in which Dr. Paul Loye, under the title of uLa Mort par la becapitaton," studies the question as to whether, aft& decapitation, consciousness survives for a short time in the severed head and physical suffering is felt in both parts of the executed body. Every time a head falls under the sword or under the executioner's ax, says Dr. Love, the imagination of the spectators has, in the physiognomy of the victim, looked for proofs of the survival of will and consciousness. The eyes turned, which was a sign of pain ; the lips moved, which showed that they wanted to speak; the mouth opened, in order to bite, in a kind of fury. There is not a movement of the face which has not been interpreted as a mark of the continuation cf feeling. And ever since the guillotine mowed down the heads of multitudes during the reign of terror scientists have stood around the scaffold, bidding all their humane faculties vanish, and concentrating their whole intellect on the one question, "Does consciousness remain after the victim's head is severed from the body?" "In connection with his belief Dr. Loye quotes a terrible story told by M, Petitgand about an Anamite who was beheaded by the sword, in 1875, at Saigon : 44 The place of execution was the Plain of Tombs, a vast sandy tract, serving as cemetery to the An&mites and the Chinese. Four Anamite pirates, taken with their arms in their hands, were to be beheaded. The chief of the band, a man in the prime of life, energetic, muscular, brave without boasting, and firm to the very last, had attracted my special attention, and I decided to make my observations on him only. Without losing sight of him for a single moment I exchanged a few words in a loud voice with the officer in charge, and noticed that the patient was also looking at me with the eliest attention. The preparations having been completed, I took my stand at the distance of about two yards from him. He knelt down, but before bending his head he exchanged a rapid look with me. "Has head fell down at the distance of about, a yard and a quarter from where I stood. It did not roll in the usual way, but stood with the Burface of the wound resting on the sand, a position by which the hemorrhage was accidentally reduced to a minimum. At this moment I was terror-stricken at seeing the eyes of the doomed man fixed frankly on my eyes. Not daring to believe in a conscious manifestation, I went quickly to one side of the head lying at my feet, and I found that the eyes followed me. Then I returned to my first position; still the eyes went with me for a short distance and then quitted me quite suddenly. The face expressed at that moment a conscious agony, the agony of a person in a state of acute asphyxia. The mouth opened violently as if to take in a breath of air, and the head, thrown off its equilibrium by the motion, rolled over. This contraction of tha maxillary muscles was the last sign of life. Since the moment of decapitation from fifteen to twenty seconds had passed. What a Deed to a Fan in Many States Indudes. Every one knows it conveys all the fences standing on the farm, but all might not think it also included the fencing stuff, posts, rails, eta, which had once been used in the fence, but had been taken down and piled up for future use again in the same place. But new fencing material just bought and never attached to the soil would not pass. So piles of hoop-poles stored away, is once used upon the land and intended to be again soused, have been considered a part of it; but loose boards or scaffold poles merely laid across the beams of the barn and never fastened to it, would not be, and the seller of the farm might take them away. Standing trees of course also pass as part of the land; so do trees blown down or cut down, and still left in the woods where they fell, but not if cut and corded up for sale; the wood has then become personal property If there be any manure in the barnyard, or in the compost heap on the field, ready for immediate use, the Buyer ordinarily, and in the absence of any contrary agreement, takes that also as belonging to the farm, though it might not be so if the owner had previously sold it to some other party, and had collected it together in a heap by itself, for such an act might be a technical severance from the soil and so convert real into personal estate ; and even a lessee of a farm could not take away the manure made on the place while he was in occupation. Growing crops also pass by the deed of a farm, unless they are expressly reserved; and when it is not intended to corivT these it should be so stated in the deed itself; a mere oral agreement to that effect would not be in most States valid in law. ' Another mode is to stipulate that possession is not to be given until some future day, in which case the crops or manure may be removed before thar, time. As to the buildings on the farm, though generally mentioned in the deed, it is not absolutely necessary they should be. A deed of land ordinarily carries all the buildings cn it belonging to the grantor, whether mentioned or not; and this rule includes the lumber or timber of any old building which has been taken down or blown down, and packed away for future use on the farm. Will Probably Suffer lor His Temerity. Mr. Grant Allen propounds in the Forum a new view of " Woman's Place in Nature." "The males," he says, "are the race; the females are merely the sex told off to recruit and produce it. All that-is distinctively human is man ; the field, the ship, the mine, the workshop; all that is truly woman is merely reproductive; the home, the nursery, the school-room. This necessity for telling off at Ifeast a considerable num
ber of the women jor the arduous du- J
ties of human maturity prevers the possibility cf woman as such ever being really in any deep sense the race. It is human to till, to build, to navigate, to manufacture; and these are the functions that fall upon man. The males have built up human civilization and have made the great functionally acquired gains in human faculty, while the females have acted as mere passive transmitters of these male acquisitions." Well, this is news, and We cheerfully hand Mr. Allen over to the punishment which his temerity and heterodoxy are sure to receive. Exchange. What a Chiropodist Thinks. "Year before last I had two women patrons to one man," said a chiropodist. "But last year, and so far this year, the falling off in the former patronage has been more than onehalf. But there has been no decrease in the number of my male customers. How do I account for all this ? Easily. Fashion in shoes is responsible for it. A year and a half ago the high, narrow French heels were the fashion in women's shoes, and thev are one of the best friends a chiropodist can have. They are regular and rapid breeders of corns. No woman can wear a pair of such shoes long without looking up a corn doctor. But the low, flat heel is now the fashion. If the rest of the shoe fits the foot, these heels are the natural ea.eniy of corns, and the chiropodist has to suffer. It is generally believed that women are more vain of their feet than men are erf theirs, but my experience has shown me that quite the contrary is the fact. Men will insist on making their feet look small, and any shoe that will do that is the fashion for them. The narrowtoed or "toothpick" style of men's shoes, worn now as much as ever, will always insure the corn doctor a living, especially if the shoes are patent leather. A patent-leather shoe, for some reason, will call acorn into being much quicker than an ordinary leather shoe. The fellows who don't have corns are those who wear roomy-toed shoes. But they mustn't be too large. A shoe too large is as bad as one too small. An oversized shoe makes corns on the bottom of the feet, and they are the worst kind, The late war was the greatest corn curer ever known. I never knew a single case of a soldier in that war who suffered from corns, and I was all through it. If a law should be passed that no shoe should be worn in this country but the pattern army shoe of the rebellion, the corn doctor's occupation would be gone." Austria's Aristocracy Nothing can be more charming than the manner of the Austrian aristocracy. It is perfect nature combined with high breeding. A characteristic of it is the absence of that insolence on the one side and of snobbishness on the other which are to be found in nearly all other societies. This arises from the fact that the only passport to the upper society is pedigree, an unquestionable descent on both sides of the house, from nobility of many generations. Without this passport a native might as well think of getting into the moon as getting into society. Therefore, the society is very small, not more than three hundred or so, all Yery much intermarried and related ; everybody knows everybody, so that pushing is impossible, and fending off unnecessary. They are civil to us, and invite us to their great parties, and come to our houses. As a spectacle of men and women, and how they play their parts, as Washington Irving used to say, I have no objections to spending my evenings thus for a small part of the year. It does not interfere with my solid work during the day-time. English society is very interesting, because anybody who has done anything noteworthy may be seen in it. But if an Austrian should be Shakspeare, Galileo, Nelson, and Baphael all in one, he couldn't be admitted into good society in Vienna unless he had the sixteen quarterings of nobility which birth alone could give him. Naturally it is not calculated to excite one's vanity that one goes as a Minister where, as an individual, he would find every door shut against him. Fortunately evening entertainments only cost the wax candles and the lemonade. John Lothrop Motley. Woman in Politics Woman in politics is a success. Her work is not on the surface, to be known of all men, but here in Washington the signs of her activity are plentiful. Here is a member of the House, able, respected, holding a very high place in committee, whose wife, a rich woman, found him poor and struggling. She married him, educated him, pushed him into politics, and will not be satisfied until she has made him President, or dies trying. There goes an .rmy officer who has had promotion after promotion, by the favor of one President after another, till he is now near the top of the heap. How did he win so many advancements? By valor or long service? No, by the tact, push and persistency of his wife. General Greely, the Arctic hero, now holds a high place in the army. He has successfully contended against many enemies, and is likely, in good time, to reach the summit of his ambition by having the signal service made an independent army bureau, with himself at the head. Is it General Greely's Arctic record that is bringing him this success, or his extraordinary ability? No. Though an able and useful man, his success is largely due to the political and social genius of Mrs. Greely. She is indomitable, resourceful and devoted. Washington letter. A Good Pair of Eyes. Mrs. Dolloff, of Jackson, N. H., is 74 years old. She has in her possession a common sewing needle that once belonged to her grandmother, and with which all the first clothes of a family of eight were made, commencing in 1777. Mrs. Dolloff has recently, with the same needle, made a lace collar for her twenty-first grandchild, sewing it with No. 100 thread without the aid of glasses. Boston Herald. Professional colorers usually dye with their boots on.
Editor Clngston's Narrow Escape. 'Is the editor in?" The person who spoke was a tall, rawboned man, with red hair and a freckled face. He had a hand like a canvas, covered ham, and was cross-eyed. Mr. Chigston, the editor and proprietor of the Doodleville Yelper, looked up. "Why ah good mornirg, sir," he replied, with a frozen sort of .smile contorting his face and a Manitoba wave careering madly up and down his spinal column, ''It's a fine day or " "Not particularly," said the visitor, in a rasping voice. And it wasn't. It was a row, blustering, rainy day, and the wild geese were flying southwestward with a reckless, On-to-Oklahoma, get-there-Eli movement, and a hideously profane emphasis in their hastily warbled music. "That's what I " began Mr. Clugston, as he noted with a sinking feeling that his caller stood in the only doorway affording an exit from his 8x10 sanctum, and that there wasn't a weapon sharper than a paste brush anywhere in sight to defend Idmself "frith in case of an attack. "No, it wasn't," M as the sneering rejoinder. "It wasn't what you meant to say, you white-livered, pop-eyed, towheaded disfigurer of white paper ! You lean, cheap, boarding-house cut from the shank of a starved mutton ! You're scared to death and you know it! I've come to polish you off, sir ! I'm going to knock your two eyes into one, and chuck your No. 6 head in your own ink keg 1" "Wh-wh-what have I done?" asked the editor, in a trembling voice. "What have you done V" echoed the large, red-haired man, coming nearer. "Do you pretend you don't know, you washed-out fragment of a man? Do you pretend you didn't mean me when you printed that piece in your paper last week about 'How to Make a White Man of a Strawberry 131onde?' Do you " "That article," exclaimed Mr. Olugston, earnestly and appealingly, was in my inside. It was printed 297 miles from here, and " "That's a little too thin! That may do to tell some elm-peeler t'rom Krei tiler's Mills, but it won't go down with me. Your paper, sir, ain't edited and published 297 miles from Doodleville. I'm going to show you, sir, how to make a mop of a Doodleville editor'?" He threw off his coat, kicked over the editorial chair, and made a fierce grub at the frightened journalise In moments of great emergency something like inspiration comes at times to the assistance of hard-pressed humanity. As his antagonist lunged savagely at him. Mr. Clugstou cast a wild, despairing glance around the room. His eye fell on .something lying on the table something that had hitherto escaped his notice. Quick as a flash he seized it and brought it down squarely on the head of his assailant. For one brief moment the gigantic frame of the red-haired man stood motionless, and then with a crash that shook the Yelper oflice from back door to awning-post in front he fell prostrate. ' Carry out this unsightly object, " said Mr. Clugstou to the office hands who came running in from the back room to see what was the trouble; and with the cold, severe aspect of a man whose time was too precious to be wasted on trill es the editor of the Doodleville Yetper sat down at his table again and resumed the work, of writing a lurid description, at 10 cents a line, of Mrs. Van Sampson's millinery opening. He had knocked the big freckle-faced man senseless with an editorial entitled, "The Tariff on VfooVChicUgo Tribune. Clear the Way without lose of time when the intestinal canal
is blocked up by reason of constipation, chronic or temporary. It should be borne in mind that this ailment is prone to become listing and obstinate, and breed other and worse complaints. Ho s tetter's Stomach Bitters is the prec ise remedy to remove the obstruction effectually, but without (benching or weakening the blockaded bo we s, a consequence always to bo apprehended from the nse of violent laxativos, which are among the most pernicious of the cheap nostrums swallowed by the credulouii and misinformed. The fiat of experience, and of the medical profession, sanctions the cluims of this standard aperient. Not only as a Bource of relief and permanent regularity to the bowels, liver and stomach, but as a means of remedying and preventing kidney and bladder troublesand favor and ague, it is without a peer. An Anecdote of Eric son. One good story of Ericsson is missed from the hnndreda that are now going about. It "was told many y ears ago that the famous inventor was invited to hear Ole Bull play the violin. His reply was that he had no time for such frivolity, as he had been taught to regard musie, that he never had an ear for it anyhow, that it would be a waste of his valuable time and a breach upon his staid daily habits. Bui; somehow his friend managed to bring the two great geniuses together. The meeting was said to have occurred in the inventor's shop. A violin was produced and Bull began to play while the inventor worked. Pretty soon Ericcson paused in his work, then he dropped his tools and listened spell-bound to the magical tones 'of the musician. He said, so the story ran, he had always felt that something had been wanting in his life, and that he had never known what it was until that day. Mtcsieal Courier. Sympathy, Mrs. Highup Such shocking stories as the papers do tell. I read to-day of a mother around the corner who tried to kill her children because she could not get them anything to eat. Mrs. Higherup Cruel creature ! Well, I don't know, though. I really believe I would rather etherize poor little Fidothau seo him hungry. Marie, go see if you can't coax Ficio to eat a little more of that tenderloin. Neio York Weekly. Johnny Dumpsjsy Pa, does a man gain wisdom by experience ? Mr. Dumpsey Seldom until it is too late, my son. Like is full of compensation. The tongue of the deaf and dumb man never gets him into trouble.
Found a Bnig or Gold in a Well. Southwark has a sensation out of the usual run. Ifc is the discovery oi John McGucken, & young contractor, of a bag of gold, MoGucken started with five fellow laborers on Wednesday morning to clean out an old unused well on a property on Second eitreet, below McKean! During the process, McGucken, w.io was' down the well alone, stumbled across a heavy object. Turning the light of his lantern on the obstruction, he saw it was a heavy canvas hag, carefully sealed and tied with a strong cord. He kicked the bog and heard the merry jingle of metal. McG ucken thought he 1: ad struck a bonanza, and was so eiated that he jerked the bag from its resting place and started for the open air. When he got half way to the top the bag which was rotten from its long stay in the well split, and the coin started to drop out. With his hand over the hole, McGucken was hauled to the top by his companions. There lay a pile of glittering gold pieces in $5, $10 and $20 coins. A hurried count showed that $940 comprised the bag's contents. How much dropped out of the bag is not known, but McGucken does not think more than $50. Like a sensible man he proceeded with his work, and when the day was ended did what his fellow workmen say was the squarest thing ever seen in Soutlrwark. Nearly $500 he divided among them, $100 he presented to his mother, $300 went to his own credit in the savings fund, and with the remaining $100 the young man is celebrating in his mild way his good fortune. He is the curiosity of Tree street, where he lives with his mother, and during the day attends to his business as if $1,000 gold bags were every-day finds with him. Who the money belongs to or who placed the bag in the well is a mystery; Philadelphia Record. THE WORST WRECK, PHYSICALLY Of any Man This Country Ever Saw, Cured Jackson. Mich., October, 1835. llhtumatic Syrup Co. Gentlemen: In November, 1884, I was cut in the wrist Dy a broken bottle, from whi'h I suffered extreme pain. I called a doctor who pronounced it sciatic rheumatism. Ho gave nte a morphine injection in iTiy right shoulder, which resulted in paralyzir.gr my right Bide. I v.as kept under the influence of morphine until last March. My right leg and mm had become bu'llv 'withered and my joints were so etiif that there was but little action in tlicm. About tl at time I discontinued the uso of morphine. About nix weeks ago 1 first heard of your lihimmatio Syiup and was advised to try it. And hero let me impress thi fact upon your mind, that my right arm and log were shrunken, paralysed, and withered so much that I could hardly walk or swincr along, and that but little, and attended with groat effort and pain. Since I have been taking you:- Syrup 1 have left off the ue of crutei:03 entirely, and only use a cane, and for the past few days I often forget it and walk without any aid. To say that I am happy, anc'i that it has greatly benefited rne, but poorly expresses my idea of your Rheumatic 1- yrup. Yours truly, C. 1). Demo. Dealer in General Groceries, cornor Trail and Mechanic Streets. Mr. 0. D. Donio is a man well known in this community, and was probably the worst wreck, physically, of any man this country over saw. He was paralyzed from rheumatic poison, and no one ever exprcted h would get well. He is w.1 11. and it simply marvelous. The above statement mailt by him is triie, and may bo fully relied upon. I am truly yours. Frank L, Khith, Ex-member Stats Legislature, ani Proprietor Hurd House, Jackson, Mich. Wanted to Know Her Sphere of Duty. "Are you the girl who was to come to our house as a nurse?" asked a fashionable lady of the healthy-looking girl who had just entered the rcora. "I am, ma'ara." "I have examined your references and I find them satisfactory. You may begin next week." "But if ye plaze, ma'am, Fd like to ask vez wan question." "What is it?" "Is it a baby or a poog dog that I'm to look afther ?" What Is sweeter than roaes That bloom in the beauty of June? Or the stately and fragrant lilies Whose bells ring a summer tunof Ah, sweeter the rosea blowing On the cheeks of those we love, And the lily of health that's glowing The cheeks' red rose above. But how soon the lily aad the roao wither in the f aces of our American women? Why is it? Simply because so many of them are victims of weaknesses, irregularities, and Junctional derangements incidental to the Bex. If they would, use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription all these beauty and health-destroying ailments might be warded off, and we would hear le&s about women Arrowing old before their time."
To regulate the stomach, Hvor, and bowels. Dr Pierce's Pellets excel One a dose. A Dreadful Scandal On Commonwealth avenue: ''Did you hear that awful thit.g that Mr. Deuceace said about Mrs. Klownie?" a)ked one lady in the group, and then, answering her own qv.estion, went on : "He said she was the most unfortunate woman at whist ; sli3 never hold a trump." ''But,5' said a listener, "she must hold a trump when she deals." And then Deuceace said, "She never deals she mis-deals." Boston Commercial Bulletin.
lOO Ladies Wanted, And 100 men to call daily on any druggist for a free trial package of Lane's Family Medicine, the great root and herb remedy, discovered by Dr, Silas Lano while in the Kocky Mountains- For diseases of the blood, liver and kidneys it is a positive cure. For constipation and clearing up the complexion it does wonders. Children like it. Everyone praises it. Large size package, 60 cents. At alt 'druggists. "A strange metamorphosis has taken place in t he tree that Washington cut with his little hatchet," remarked the snake editor. "How is that?" asked the horse editor. It was a cherry tree, you remember." "Yes." "Well, now it is regarded as a chestnut" Oregon, the Paradise nt JFarnrmrs. Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant crops. Best fruit, grain, grass, and sto;k country in the world. Full information free. Address the Oregon Immigration Board.Portland Oregon.
As an illustrat ion of the progress and goaheadativenestt of our country, it may ho mentioned that the "seventeen year locust," which appeared only twice in thirty-four years half a century ago, now visits us annually. (r afflicted with Bora Eyea, use Dir. Isaac Thompson's EjeWito Druggists ssi.it Ka
Sounded Like Swenrlutr Mr. Boggs (struggling with a couple of pieces oi' stove- oipe) .
Mrs Boggs "What was that ? Were
you swearing, VVilJiam Boggs r "Swearing! Of 3ourse not. I sked if you'd like to go ;his evening; to Wag
ner s "(ictterdaninierunor.
Havb you ever tried Dobbin' Electric" Soap? it don't cost much for you to get one bar oi your jjrocer, arid see for yourself ffhy it is praised by so many, after 24 years' bteady sale. Be surfo fret no limitation. Kikby Lend me & river, will you, old boy? I'm clean broke. Moxey That's a pretty goo ring. Why don't von hock it? Kirbv Couldn't, you know. ItV. a fio.ivonir of a deceased brother. Moxer Well, my money is a souvenir of deceased father. (.Jid he walkodrf.) The office-secke? has been weighed in tho balance and found granting anytlJg he can get.
All Tired Out from the depressing effect ot the ctiantfinii: season, or by hard irork and worry you reed the toning, bnlldinf up, nervestrengthtfLiiufi effect of Hood's Sar$aiarUla to give you & feeling of -health and strength again. It purifies; ths blood, zures biliousnsa, dyspepsia, headacho, eto. Sold by all drig(;ist, Be sure to f?et Hood's fiarsapariUa. Irepared by C. I. Hood k Co., LoweU, Mass.
find Pteo's Curd op
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3h- m
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PATENTS
F. A. IJTiWANTf, Washington, Jt. C3Send icr circular.
$2
Representatives wanted.
oodH new and ae!.l on iht.
y Household nevtssity. Nr canvassing. h'.lAe Mi& Co., Pulkaan liidfi, Chicago.
ouSOl Sort relief
KIDDER'S PASTIL LES,,bT?an.1,.
igaMI"r-nCStonr., MMU
find (hat PIso'b Cure for CoiiHUT.ipUon :uos only HU:VEXTS, 'but aUo Hoaise-nesa.
CATON'S FRENCH VITALIZER8. .'.'nJSS.rir Un VI I r MipIt Vigor, tut U c j Leiciir&ti 6pfc Um Bxufc;btlit" knit Loit Viulitj ktiovn. A Mtr tlloui Inucorttor, ntlr W huuiiiM. Iff anil. 1, 6 br 3. lirauUra lit. DJL. CAI03, Boitta. DETECTIVES' YTantn fa rry county, fitr-ewd men io Htt no ! lntn etioa. In our Secret 8e rrr,e. Kxperi-mcnnt nciarj. 8ead 2c. fltarapt GrannanDetctiveBureajCo.44Arcade,Ciitclnnati,a
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m
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if I -
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1.000 Brewster's Safety Ilein Holders given a"w ay to introduce tbem. livery horse owner buys torn 1 to 0. Lines never uuder howes' leet. ttenc. 25 cento in stamps to pay pot-tne and packing for Nickel-Plated Kairmlo 'hat sellK for
ific. Hrew gter Co., Holly, MJch
My little boy, 5 years old, wan pick with a disease for which doctors had no name. The nails came off hit. flng ers, and the finders came off to the
middle- lomt. or 3 years ho euiiered dreadfully la now getting well, and I am satisfied Swift's Specific lis the chief cause of Ka improvement John Deiixl, Kan. :L2, 1SS9. Peru, Ind. POISONED BY A CALF My little boy broke out with tsoreii ana
nicer, the :result of the italiva of a ctilf coming is con
tact vita a cut finger. Tte ulcers wc re de?p and gainful and stowed no inclination to heal 1 gave "him Bwift'e Specific, and he is now well. Feb. 15, '89. John F. Heard, Auburn, Ala. Send for books on Bkod Poisons A Skin Disttisefc, free. wx ;3mecuho Co., Atlanta, Go. BMNCHTTri
m
ft
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After spending Ten Winter! South, was Cured by Scott's Emulsion, W6 Gmtre 8t.( TStew York, June 25th, 1S88. f The Winter fitter the groat ff re In Chicago I contracted Bronchial affections, and eince then have been obllgrod to impend nearily every Winter South. Last November was advised to try Scott's Emu lsion of Cod Uver Oil with Hypophoiiphitoa and to my surprise was reliieved at once, and! by continuing: its use three months was entirely cured, gained flesh and etrengih and was able to stand even the Blizzard and attend to business every day, C. T. CHURCHILL Bold by all Druggists
eomatism
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IS CURED BY
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.!?. FARMING REGIONS of NKBRASKA, SIAKSASp COLORADO and Wl OMIlS Fker Government avd othbk iAXDS. DESCKIPTI' ClIlCTTLAm
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Address
MGODY&C0. Cincinnati, 0
K OAHESTS a W to fit j
ratals
PALMER'S MAGNEl 10 INHALE!!
$i Talented June IS,
Thislnh;iler consists of a powerful McffuettcCoil Inclosing a supply cf pure Japanese Cryntab. of MenthoL the whole iticaeed In polished rubber wxth nickeled removable caps. Sufferers are scarcely aware that Catarrh is due to the presence of microbes in tha mucous mem brave lining the nose and t'oroat. After one or two simple inhalation the microscope wiu ahow in the catarrhal mucus dead formti of toe par aftltes which, before the inhalations, were seen to ba alive and active. They can only exist iu membranes that are below tho healthy standard. j; is forth want of the under-tandiug of thsc facts lihat the euro of Catarrh is made difficult. For a permanent cnta It is necessa.ry not only to kill the serm but also to strengthen the membrane. Thi is accomplished by the electric force stored up in the Magnetic Coll. bein the moBt powerful natural tonic to the weakened tissues. Speakern and vocalists will ttnd the Inbaler very benenWal in strengthening the to ice. Forwarded by mail on receipt of the price by D. O. GALLKAH & CO., an Franklin Street, Cticago, HI.
TYPE,
JOB AND NEWSPAPER PRESSES, PAPER COTTERS
AND ATjTi KINDS OF
Pra
Furnished Promptly at Many facturers' Prices..
Our stock of Job and Newspaper Presses, rape Cutters, eto.t is the largest to be found in Chicago. Printers are invited to call and iuapoot the tfaoaa when in the city, Estimates for Newspaper and Job OJh Ontafclwill be furnished with pleasure. Second-Hand Prxntimc Machinery bought at liberal tig ares. Send for nur list of New and Second-H&nd H chiuery and Material. Printers wishing to purchase M"aohinevy or Material of any kind should get our prices before doai'jff deals CHICAGO NEWSPAPER IMOJ, 271 & 273 Franklin Street, CHICAGO. TUU
I iweribG arid folly dorse &lg O as the only specific for the rtain cure of tbis disease. O, H. ISO RAH AM, M. 0 Amsterdam, N, Y. W'd have sold Big Q ? many years, and It ha
KtvtD tae neat ox uuaf action. IXK.DYCHK4CO..
C blcago, ill S1.00. Sold by Bragg
ism
1 TO fc DATS.
UMuBtriMH.
Mfitatrkytka
an CfeftmScal &
&nnlnnii
Ohio
t4
1
C. N. U.
WHEN WRITING TO I VE1 ITI SERS please say you saw th ad ve rtJbatuent In this pa per.
Non-it cftimln anUia
ftuup-'d wt'-b the atwi'e
TKADH MARK.
is Tiie Best Waterproof Coat
Don't waste our money on a gum or rubber coat. The FISH B.IAXD 8 CJCKEF
la absolute ytt irrand t'tn-iritoor, an J will keep vou dry in t!ie tiardai t stona i air (i 4r ftfll II O 1 IT') mr ij-v-. i ...1 v. k ,. H . It I V f i . .
yp'yynd f.r d snriptlvo cnUlognc trt A. J TOWEU. '30 Plmmrvis ist. Host n Ma
SL ILK E H
IftimTli ve the "rwH b u
row bale ov all druggists. 1
